Spectral Lines
Team Oxygen
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Team Carbon
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Exactly. If you put light from a common streetlamp through a
prism, or look at the light through a diffraction grating, you will
see distinct lines. Two common kinds of street lights use sodium vapor
and mercury vapor bulbs. Each of these lights has a different spectral
"signature", and you can tell what kind of lamp it is by its spectral
lines.
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Pick an element from the menu to see its spectral signature.
Is that why different street lights seem to be different colors?
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You got it. This technique is so reliable that scientists can tell
what elements they are looking at just by reading the lines.
Spectroscopy (this page is currently under construction) is the science of
using spectral lines to figure out what something is made of.
That's how we know the composition of distant stars, for instance.
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Wait a second. We learned earlier that radiation is
caused by wiggling charges, and the rate of the wiggling determines the
wavelength. If only some wavelengths are coming out of the atom, that
would mean that the electrons are wiggling at only some
frequencies.
How does that happen?
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That was the big puzzle. Fortunately, a Danish physicist named
Niels Bohr came up with an answer...
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